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Congress gives up on any last-minute deal to avoid sequester

By Lori Montgomery and Rosalind S. HeldermanThe Washington Post

Posted:
03/01/2013 12:01:00 AM MST

Updated:
03/01/2013 02:48:04 AM MST

The United States Capitol is reflected in the Capitol reflecting pool Wednesday evening, Feb. 27, 2013, in Washington. The White House says automatic spending reductions set to kick in Friday will be put off until as close to midnight Friday night as possible. Call them the Cinderella cuts. The law, passed by Congress on Jan. 2 simply says that "on March 1, 2013, the president shall order a sequestration for fiscal year 2013." (Alex Brandon, Associated Press)

WASHINGTON — One day before $85 billion in automatic spending cuts were due to hit the Pentagon and other federal agencies, Congress on Thursday abandoned efforts to avert the cuts and left town for the weekend. The sequester is here, and policymakers have no plans to make it go away.

President Barack Obama is scheduled to meet Friday at the White House with congressional leaders, but expectations for the meeting are low. House Republicans are already turning their attention to the next deadline March 27, drafting a measure that would avoid a government shutdown while leaving the sequester in place through the end of September.

Administration officials insist that the path to compromise lies in a "balanced" approach that replaces the cuts in part with higher taxes. But among Republicans — even those who admit the sequester will cause pain to the folks back home — the appetite for new taxes is virtually nil.

"Look, the American people will simply not accept replacing spending cuts agreed to by both parties with tax hikes. And I plan to make all of this clear to the president when I meet with him," Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said in a speech on the Senate floor.

Despite a steady drumbeat of dire warnings from the White House about the sequester's impact on jobs and economic growth, financial markets reacted with a yawn. On Thursday, the Dow Jones industrial average closed down a bit after surging within 25 points of its all-time high, reached in October 2007.

Meanwhile, the Internal Revenue Service announced that it would delay furloughs of agency workers until after the April 15 tax-filing deadline, providing another reason to doubt that the cuts would hit hard and fast enough to change GOP hearts and minds.

"The sequester is not a good idea. The reality is it's a terrible idea. As an appropriator, it's even more terrible to us than to normal people," said Rep. John Carter, R-Tex., who oversees homeland security spending on the House Appropriations Committee.

Carter's central Texas district is home to Fort Hood, one of the nation's largest military bases, and its economy is heavily dependent on government spending.

"But if we don't face up to these things and lead on this issue, what's the panic going to look like when we start seeing our entitlement programs collapse around our ears?" Carter said. "It's hard. But doing the hard thing is the definition of leadership. As Harry Truman said, 'The buck stops here.' "

Administration officials predict Republicans will be more open to compromise once the sequester starts to steal resources from local schools, police forces and businesses that hold contracts with the government.

But Republicans say the dynamics of the sequester are fundamentally different from the year-end fiscal cliff, when large numbers of congressional Republicans agreed for the first time in more than two decades to approve significant tax-rate increases.

In December, the failure to act meant taxes would automatically rise for everyone, an outcome most Republicans opposed. With the sequester, the failure to act means government spending will automatically fall by $85 billion this year — an outcome most Republicans not only desire but promised on the campaign trail.

On Thursday, not a single Senate Republican broke ranks to support a Democratic proposal to replace the sequester in part with higher taxes on households earning more than $5 million a year. The measure won 51 votes but failed to garner the 60 votes needed to avoid a GOP filibuster.

Three Democrats who are up for re-election in 2014 voted against the tax measure. And two other Democrats — Sens. Mark Warner of Virginia and Max Baucus of Montana — voted for a competing Republican proposal that would keep the sequester in place but give Obama new flexibility to decide where the cuts would fall.

The GOP bill was rejected 62-38, with nine Republicans who feared it would afford Obama too much power voting no.

With that, the Senate closed up shop for the week. The House had completed its work hours earlier.

So lawmakers left Washington resigned to the idea of letting the cuts take effect sometime before midnight Friday, when the law requires Obama to sign a formal order telling agencies how much to cut from each account.

"Today, Republicans in the Senate faced a choice about how to grow our economy and reduce our deficit," Obama said. "And instead of closing a single tax loophole that benefits the well-off and well-connected, they chose to cut vital services for children, seniors, our men and women in uniform and their families.

"I believe we should do better," Obama said, adding that Friday's meeting at the White House offers an opportunity to chart "a path forward."

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